Is the white-ivory assay of Drosophila melanogaster a useful tool in genetic toxicology?
The white-ivory assay of Drosophila is based on the detection of reversions to wild-type phenotype of ommatidia with the white-ivory mutation. A tandem quadruplication of this gene is used in order to increase the reversion probability. Although the exact mechanism implicated in reversion is not known, revertant spots are believed to arise as a consequence of intrachromosmal recombination or related phenomena. Since the white-ivory assay has not been broadly used, the number of chemicals tested until now is still limited. In this work, we have assayed 25 chemicals belonging to several chemical groups, i.e., crosslinking agents, DNA-topoisomerase inhibitors, antimetabolites/nucleotide pool inhibitors, cyclic-adduct inducers, halogenated hydrocarbons, bulky-adduct inducers, intercalating agents, oxidative damage inducers, and a multiple damage inducer, to validate this test. Cross-linking agents, halogenated hydrocarbons, and the multiple damage inducer, dounomycin, were positive. On the